Hi!
A while ago  I moved my blog from Blogger to WordPress. And since I’m blogging from 2007, there are a lot of blogposts to check… So if you see a blogpost that’s missing photo’s or has a weird layout, please let me know by leaving a comment at that particular blogpost. In the meantime I’m walking through all my posts myself too.
I hope you like my new layout! Thanks for visiting.
See you around!
XO Iris
Hi!
Ik heb mijn blog van Blogger naar WordPress verhuisd! En aangezien ik sinds 2007 blog, zijn er een heleboel blogposts te controleren … Dus: zie je een blogpost waarbij foto’s ontbreken of die een rare lay-out heeft, laat het me weten dmv het plaatsen van een reactie op die blogpost. In de tussentijd loop ik al mijn berichten zelf ook nog na.
Ik hoop dat mijn nieuwe layout bevalt!
Bedankt voor je bezoekje, zie je later!
XO Iris
The use of images and text from this blog.
The use of images and text from this blog.
Want to use a post, photos or text of my blog? Great! Please always mention my full blog name and a correct link to the origin of the article on my blog on: your blog, pinterest boards, instagram, tumbler, your site or wherever you want to use my content. And... Please give me a note if you have it published!
Also make sure that all the images have the original source / photographer named. For pictures that are not mine, please contact the owner by yourself to ask permission...
As for the posts on my blog: I try my best to mention all the names and links correct and ask permission in advance. If you spot an item here on my blog that belongs to you and I do not have the accurate information, please contact me, I'll adjust it asap.
Thank you! XO Iris | C-More
Gebruik van beeldmateriaal en tekst van deze blog.
Wil je een post, foto's of teksten van mijn blog gebruiken? Leuk! Plaats dan in ieder geval mijn blognaam en een link naar de oorsprong van het betreffende artikel op mijn blog op: jouw blog, pinterest boards, instagram, tumbler, je website of waar je het ook publiceert. Geef je mij een berichtje als je het geplaatsthebt?
Zorg ook dat bij alle afbeeldingen de originele bron / fotograaf komt te staan.
Wat betreft de posts op mijn blog: ik doe mijn best alle namen en linkjes goed te vermelden. Mocht je iets tegenkomen wat jou toebehoort en ik er geen juiste informatie bij hebben staan, neem dan contact met me op, dan pas ik het direct aan.
Ongelofelijk mooie stand van Vitra op de beurs in Milaan 2012!
Het was een zeer sfeervolle stand met het gevoel alsof je er zo kon intrekken. Het voelde gelijk als thuis.
De styling is ook heel goed gedaan.
Echt het voorbeeld van het VITRA concept ” Collage-wonen” waar ik mij helemaal in kan vinden.
Ik dacht het al te voelen toen ik op bezoek was bij een goede vriend: Brussel is THE place to be! Ik was er tijdens designseptember, maar the New York times schrijft er ook al over!!
Thx Pim!!
NYT:Lees hier het hele artikel: http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/21/belge-epoque/
“. Belge Epoque
By MONICA KHEMSUROV | SEPTEMBER 21, 2011, 7:30 PM
Photographs by Tim Barber
Barbara Cuglietta, left, and Lilou Vidal at their gallery, VidalCuglietta.
Before Christina Vantzou, a Kansas City, Mo.-born art student, fell in love with an American expat during a layover in Brussels seven years ago, she had never given the city a second thought. She assumed it was as bland as everyone said, and when she packed her bags and moved there soon after, she found plenty of Europeans who agreed. âThe people I was hanging out with at the time referred to it as the Mexico of Europe,â she says. âEveryone wanted to go to Paris or London or Amsterdam, and Brussels was just this weird place in the middle.â
At first, Vantzou stayed mostly for her relationship and for the hefty artistâs stipend she received from the Belgian government, having secured E.U. citizenship by way of her Greek father. But then a funny thing happened. Not only was she discovering that there was more to the cultural scene than sheâd imagined, she was also watching as other artists â Parisians, even â began settling in the city. Long ignored or even mocked by its neighbors, Brussels seemed to be entering a kind of creative renaissance. âWhere it used to be like âBrussels? Why the heck would you move there?â these days itâs like, âOh, yeah, Iâve been hearing about all the stuff happening there,â â Vantzou says. âBrussels used to be this forgotten place, and suddenly people are talking about it like they were talking about Berlin 10 years ago.â
Brussels may not quite be Berlin â it has less than a third of the population and none of the sexy post-Wall iconography â but its creative scene is thriving. And perhaps because it has flown under the radar for so long, or because its coalition government is perpetually in shambles, it has remained extremely affordable. Just as the allure of Berlin in the 1990s lay in the fact that young people could run clubs out of abandoned buildings or start their own galleries for next to nothing, a new generation of Europeans is beginning to fixate on Brusselsâs cheap rents and lack of competition. Dispelling old notions of the city as boring and conservative, theyâve spent the last few years opening the kinds of hip bars, restaurants, galleries and shops that used to be more rare here.
This may sound dubious to anyone who has traveled to Brussels in the past decade, visited the museums and flea markets and the designer flagships along Rue Antoine Dansaert, stuffed themselves full of pommes frites and concluded there was nothing more to do. Brussels âis definitely not a city where everything is obvious, announced and organized,â explains Dimitri Jeurissen, the Belgian creative director of BaseDesign. âThereâs a huge amount of cultural offerings, but everything is so understated. You have to scratch the surface to get to the essence of whatâs going on.â Possibly because of their countryâs history of being dismissed, Belgians have tended to keep to themselves and let their achievements go unnoticed. That independence has done wonders for the cityâs creative output but nothing for its marketing skills, the lack of which have obscured Brusselsâs charms for even the most clued-in travelers.
Niels Radtke and Aude Gribomont â who left their jobs as an event producer and a fashion editor, respectively, to start the store â were uncertain about doing so on their home turf. In the past, Radtke explains, the coupleâs peers could be viciously skeptical of new things. âHype means nothing here,â he says. âIf Belgians like something, they go for it, and if not, they stand around and watch you go down. But we could never have found this kind of space in the middle of Paris, and Brussels really needed a place like this.â Not only is Hunting and Collecting succeeding, its events have become a kind of social linchpin for the A-list, which can now flit between it and Mapp, another shop down the street with a similar experimental bent and a Parisian expat D.J. at the helm. Radtke doesnât believe this could have happened eight years ago. âI think itâs a generation change,â he says.
Nicholas Lewis calls it the Eurostar effect. Three years ago, he helped found the magazine The Word to catalog everything going on here. The rise of the E.U. was inspiring Belgians â and those from Brussels in particular â to adopt a more European identity. âPeople are traveling a lot more,â Lewis says, pointing out that the distance from Brussels to Paris by train is just over one hour. âOur readers can be in London, Paris or Amsterdam all week and come back on the weekends, bringing inspiration with them. They come back wanting more from Brussels.â
The fashion-design duo Sandrina Fasoli and Michael Marson at their shop, left; Niels Radtke and Aude Gribomont, owners of the new concept store Hunting and Collecting.
Perhaps most telling is the influx of Parisians, who would have previously equated moving here with falling off the map. Lilou Vidal, co-founder of the Galerie VidalCuglietta with Barbara Cuglietta, says she felt doors opening for her in Brussels that never would have opened back home in France. After putting in time working for the local dealer Catherine Bastide, the two found their own affordable loft space downtown, filled it with work by established and semi-unknown artists and had more than 300 people at their first opening last fall.
Even Almine Rech, who owns a top contemporary gallery in Paris, moved to Brussels and opened a space (not far from Barbara Gladstoneâs). âWeâve had a lot more visitors in the last two years,â she told me when I dropped in on her 10,000-square-foot former garage off Avenue Louise. âPeople are coming from London and the U.S. now that they hear Brussels is cool.â
Cool it may be, but the city isnât letting go of what the artist Zin Taylor, a Canadian transplant, calls âa kind of dark surrealism.â Taylor, who shows with VidalCuglietta, says there have been nights when he winds up in a creepy underground swingersâ club from the â60s, or sipping $2 wine at a 150-year-old bar. âYou go in and out of these pockets of strangeness. Thatâs what itâs like living here.â And thatâs why Brussels, with any luck, will never exactly be the new Berlin or Paris; itâs too steeped in its own quirkiness. On my own night out, I went to what I thought was going to be a raucous party for The Word at a local bar, only to find that the place was no more than a tiny cafe on an empty residential street. âThis is the kind of place Belgians love,â insisted Lewis, who called the next day to tell me that by 2 a.m. â long after I had retired for the night â people were dancing on the tables.
ESSENTIALS: BRUSSELS
Hotels
Concept Hotel
High-design B&B. 39 Grand-Place; 011-32-474-03-24-70; concepthotel.be; doubles from about $220.
Odette en Ville
A 1920s house with eight monochromatic rooms. 25 Rue du ChĂątelain; 011-32-2-640-26-26; chez-odette.com; doubles from $360.
Pantone Hotel
Colorful newcomer. 1 Place Loix; 011-32-2-541-48-98; pantonehotel.com; doubles from $100.
Night Life
Libertine Supersport
Saturday night party for visiting D.J.âs. At K-Nal; 1 Avenue du Port; libertinesupersport.be
High Needs Low
Culty quarterly dance party in an old train station. Gare du CongrĂšs; highneedslow.be.
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